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"Barley is beer's basic ingredient.  After it's been malted, barley gives beer it's flavor, color, sweetness, and mouthfeel or body.  When sugars from the malted barley are consumed by the yeast, alcohol and carbon dioxide in the beer are created."
by Head Brewer Paul Segura

BARLEY - A cereal plant (Hordeum vulgare) of the grass family (Gramineae) that also includes wheat, rye, oats, maize, rice, millet, and sorghum. There are two varieties of barleyclassed according to the number of rows of grain on each of the ears of the plant: two- and six-rowed barley. Barley is the cereal grain preferred for brewing because the corn (or grain) is covered by a strwlike husk that protects the embryo (or germ) during malting and helps to filter the wort during lautering by forming a filter bed. The essential qualities for brewing barley are high starch content, sufficient diastatic power to transform the starch into sugar, low protein content, and germinative power close to or above 98 percent. Substitute cereal grains used in brewing are called adjuncts.
- The Dictionary of Beer & Brewing by Dan Rabin

     
 

"LIke the human body, beer is about 98% water.  Lager beers are usually made with "soft" water, while ales are usually made with "hard" water.  The terms "soft" and "hard" refer to the water's mineral content."
by Head Brewer Paul Segura

WATER - One of the four ingredients of beer.The only requirements for water used in brewing is that it be drinkable and nonchlorinated. Chemically speaking, brewing water should be nonalkaline and of a certain hardness, prerequisites easily attained with the proper treatment.
- The Dictionary of Beer & Brewing by Dan Rabin

     
 

"Yeast is a single-celled living fungus that feeds on malted barley sugars, producing alcohol, carbon dioxide, and often times esters - which can give the beer various fruit-like flavors."
by Head Brewer Paul Segura

YEAST - Microscopic, unicellular, fungi of the genus Saccharomyces, distinct from bacteria because they possess a true nucleus. Yeasts are classed depending on their ability to sporulate and the method of sporulation. Brewing yeasts are classed into three categories: bottom-fermenting yeast, or Saccharomyces carlsbergensis; top-fermenting yeast yeast, or Saccharomyces cerevisiae; and wild yeasts, such as Saccharomyces candida and other species. More than five hundred types of yeasts have been isolated, not including the numerous wild strains. During the fermentation process, yeast converts the natural malt sugars into equal parts alcohol and carbon dioxide gas.
- The Dictionary of Beer & Brewing by Dan Rabin

     
 

"Hops are bitter herbs that appear little miniature green pine cones that grow on vines.  After barley, hops are probably the most noticeable ingredient in beer.  They provide beer with a bitterness that balances the sweetness from the barley.  They can also give beer its floral bouquet as well as act like a natural preservative in beer."
by Head Brewer Paul Segura

HOPS - A perennial clibing vine, also known by the Latin botanical name Humulus lupulus, a member of the Cannabinaceae family. The female plant yields flowers of soft-leaved pinelike cones (called strobile) measuring about an inch in length. Only the female ripened flower is used for flavoring beer. Because hops reproduce through cuttings, the male plants are not cultivated and are even routed out to prevent them from fertilizing the female plants. There are presently over one hundred varieties of hops cultivated around the world. Apart from contributing bitterness, hops impart aroma and flavor, reduce the surface tension during the boiling stage, assist in forming a yeast head during ale fermentation, and inhibit the growth of bacteria in wort and beer. Hops are added at the beginning of the boiling stage to give the brew its bitter flavor, and at the end of the boil to give it aroma and hop character.
- The Dictionary of Beer & Brewing by Dan Rabin

 
Timeline of Beer History

by Prof. Linda Raley, Texas Tech University
Click HERE for the original web article

Ancient History

Historians speculate that prehistoric nomads may have made beer from grain & water before learning to make bread.

Beer became ingrained in the culture of civilizations with no significant viticulture.

Noah's provisions included beer on the Ark.

4300 BC, Babylonian clay tablets detail recipes for beer.

Beer was a vital part of civilization and the Babylonian, Assyrian, Egyptian, Hebrew, Chinese, and Inca cultures.

Babylonians produced beer in large quantities with around 20 varieties.

Beer at this time was so valued that it was sometimes used to pay workers as part of their daily wages.

Early cultures often drank beer through straws to avoid grain hulls left in the beverage.

Egyptians brewed beer commercially for use by royalty served in gold goblets, medical purposes, and as a necessity to be included in burial provisions for the journey to the hereafter.

Different grains were used in different cultures:

a) Africa used millet, maize and cassava.

b) North America used persimmon although agave was used in Mexico.

c) South America used corn although sweet potatoes were used in Brazil.

d) Japan used rice to make sake.

e) China used wheat to make samshu.

f) Other Asian cultures used sorghum.

g) Russians used rye to make quass or kvass.

h) Egyptians used barley and may have cultivated it strictly for brewing as it made poor bread.

1600 BC Egyptian texts contain 100 medical prescriptions calling for beer.

If an Egyptian gentleman offered a lady a sip of his beer they were betrothed.

Early brewers used herbals like balsam, hay, dandelion, mint, and wormwood seeds, horehound juice, and even crab claws & oyster shells for flavorings.

Romans brewed "cerevisia" (Ceres the goddess of agriculture & vis meaning strength in Latin).

55 BC Roman legions introduce beer to Northern Europe.

49 BC Caesar toasted his troops after crossing the Rubicon, which began the Roman Civil War.

Before the Middle Ages brewing was left to women to make since it was considered a food as well as celebration drink.

23 BC Chinese brewed beer called "kiu"

500-1000 AD the first half of the Middle Ages, brewing begins to be practiced in Europe, shifting from family tradition to centralized production in monasteries and convents (hospitality for traveling pilgrims).

During Medieval times beer was used for tithing, trading, payment and taxing.

1000 AD hops begins to be used in the brewing process.

1200 AD beer making is firmly established as a commercial enterprise in Germany, Austria, and England.

a) German's preferred cold temperature lagers (bottom-fermentation) stored in caves in the Alps.

b) English preferred mild temperature ales (top-fermentation) stored in cellars.

1295 King Wenceslas grants Pilsen Bohemia brewing rights (formerly Czechoslovakia, now Slovakia & Czech Republic).

1420 German brewers develop the lager method of brewing.

1489 Germany's first brewing guild, Brauerei Beck, was established.

1490's Columbus found Indians making beer from corn and black birch sap.

Renaissance History

1516 Bavarian brewing guilds push for the Reinheitsgeobot purity laws make it illegal to use any ingredients but water, barley, and hops in the brewing of beer (they didn't know yeast existed).

1553 Beck's Brewery founded & still brewing today.

Late 1500's Queen Elizabeth I of England drank strong ale for breakfast.

1587 the first beer brewed in New World at Sir Walter Raleigh's colony in Virginia--but the colonists sent requests to England for better beer.

1602 Dr. Alexander Nowell discovers that ale can be stored longer in cork sealed, glass bottles.

1612 the first commercial brewery opened in New Amsterdam (NYC, Manhattan) after colonists advertised in London newspapers for experienced brewers.

1620 Pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock because the beer supplies were running low.

1674 Harvard College has its own brewhouse.

1680 William Penn (founder of Pennsylvania) operated commercial brewery.

1757 Washington wrote his personal recipe "To Make Small Beer."

1786 Molson brewery is founded in what is today Canada.

George Washington and Thomas Jefferson had their own private brewhouses.

Samuel Adams operated commercial brewery.

Soldiers in the revolutionary army received rations of a quart of beer a day.

1789 James Madison proposes that Congress levy a low 8-cent duty per barrel on malt liquors to encourage "the manufacture of beer in every State in the Union."

Beer and bread were the mainstays of the ordinary person's diet for centuries.

Yeasts during this time were exactly the same as those used in bread.

Modern History

Before the 1800's most beer was really "Ale."

1810 Munich establishes Oktoberfest as an official celebration.

1830's Bavarians Gabriel Sedlmayr of Munich and Anton Dreher of Vienna developed the lager method of beer production.

1842 the first golden lager is produced in Pilsen, Bohemia.

In the mid-19th Century (1850's) German immigrant brewers introduced cold maturation lagers to the US (Anheuser-Busch, Miller, Coors, Stroh, Schlitz, and Pabst roots begin here).

The modern era of brewing in the US began in the late 1800's with commercial refrigeration (1860), automatic bottling, pasteurization (1876), and railroad distribution.

1870's Adolphus Busch pioneers the use of double-walled railcars, a network of icehouses to make Budweiser the first national brand.

1876 Pasteur unraveled the secrets of yeast in the fermentation process, and he also developed pasteurization to stabilize beers 22 years before the process was applied to milk.

1880 there are approximately 2,300 breweries in the US.

1890s Pabst is the first US brewer to sell over 1 million barrels in a year.

1909 Teddy Roosevelt brought over 500 gal. of beer on safari in Africa.

1914 commercial competition drives the number of operating breweries down to 1,400.

1933 Prohibition ends for beer (April 7).

1935 only 160 breweries survive Prohibition.

1935 the beer can is introduced (American Can Co. & Kreuger Brewing).

1938 Elise Miller John heads Miller Brewing for 8 years as the first and only woman ever to run a major brewing company.

1965 Fritz Maytag purchases Anchor Brewing Co.

1966 Budweiser is the first brand to sell 10 million barrels in a year.

1976 New Albion is the first in the rebirth of brewpubs and microbreweries in the US opening in California.

1988 Asahi Super Dry (Japan) introduces new beer category (soon to follow is Michelob Dry).

1989 Karl Strauss Brewing Company established in San Diego, California

1991 the US produces 20% of the world beer volume (world's largest).

1992:

1) The US beer industry produced & sold 2.62 billion cases of beer.

2) Estimated per capita consumption was 22.7 gallons (ranked 13th worldwide).

3) Beer drinkers consumed 5.89 Billion gallons, enough to fill the Houston Astrodome over 12 times or 330 oil tankers.

4) Five brewers produced 89.4% of domestic product:

a) Anheuser-Busch (A-B), 44.5%

b) Miller Brewing, 21.8%

c) Coors, 10.4%

d) Stroh, 7.4%

e) G. Heileman, 5.3%

5) The world's largest combined-site brewer was A-B, at 1.166 Billion cases.

6) The world's largest single-site brewery was Coors Brewing, Golden, Colorado, at 272 Million cases.

1993 US retail beer sales exceed $45 Billion.


by Prof. Linda Raley, Texas Tech University

 
     
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